212 



THE MORGAN HORSE 



or 1822, by Joshua Ballard, who came to New Haven from New Salem, 

 Massachusetts. Died 1823 or 1824. Harvey Yale, Middlebury, 

 Vermont, remembers this horse well and says he knows Ballard 

 brought him from the South, and he is quite certain that he brought 

 him from Walpole, New Hampshire, and that he was in part of im- 

 ported blood. Mr. Yale speaks highly of the horse and says that he 

 resembled Lambert. Mr. Eldredge, formerly of New Haven, Ver- 

 mont, who also remembers the horse well, and whose father raised a 

 colt from him, says that he was a- beautiful horse. Vermont Beauty, 

 son of this horse, was frequently if not generally called a Morgan both 

 in New Hampshire and Vermont, where he was owned, but. from the 

 information received, we think it probable that his sire was got by 

 Quicksilver, foaled in Massachusetts 1802, a son of imported Dey of 

 Algiers, Arabian, from an imported mare, and that passed to Mr. 

 Bellows of Walpole, N. H., about 1810. 



Prince Fearnaught, i. 

 Royal Fearnaught, 12, 2 p. 



Total 10 ; 3 in 2 .-30 ; 10 race winners. 

 Races won, 31. Races lost, 79. Total races, no. 

 Sires : Carenaught, i. Fearnaught (Whitcombs) I 



Fearnaught Jr., i, i p. Manchester i p. 

 6 sires ; 16 trotters ; 4 pacers. 

 Sire from daughter: Hampton (?), i. 

 Dams of : Alcazar 2 :24%. Kentucky Russell 2 :2O. 



Clara M. 2:29%. Walter A. 2 129%. 



Second dam of : Queen of Upland 2:25%. 



ROYAL FEARNAUGHT 2:36^, solid chestnut, fifteen and three- 

 fourths hands, eleven hundred and ninety-five pounds ; was bred by 

 B. S. Wright, Boston, Massachusetts, got by Fearnaught, and foaled 

 1873 : dam, Lady Smothers, bay, fifteen hands, bred by Leonard T. 

 Tucker, Royalton, Vermont, and got by Draco, son of Young Morrill; 

 second dam said by Mr. Tucker to have been of English blood. He 

 was sold to E. C. Walker, New York city, and James Walker, Cold- 

 water, Michigan, and taken to Coldwater when three, and has since 

 been kept thereby James Walker, except season of 1887, when he was 

 at Budtown, Bourbon county, Kentucky. 



